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The Museum’s Collections document the fate of Holocaust victims, survivors, rescuers, liberators, and others through artifacts, documents, photos, films, books, personal stories, and more. Search below to view digital records and find material that you can access at our library and at the Shapell Center.

Danek Gertner collection

The Danek Gertner collection contains primarily two memoirs and a collection of records copied from the Central State Historical Archives of Ukraine in L'viv. The copied records contain police records, Zionist organization questionnaires, and information concerning specific people from Żabie, Ukraine; the hometown of Danek Gertner. The two memoirs are unrelated. Also included are two Ukrainian newspapers, photographs of memorials in Żabie, and postcards of synagogues.

David “Danek” Gertner was born in 1919 into an affluent and well-educated family. His parents, Eliezer and Zelda Gertner, were known throughout the town of Żabie, Poland (now Verkhovyna, Ukraine) as the proprietor of a hotel and several pastures which were rented out to neighbors. Danek was the second of four brothers, named Arie, Mirek, and Schimon, and he attended school at the Institute of Technology in L’wow, Poland. In November 1940, following Soviet occupation of the area, Danek was inducted into the Red Army. After arriving to the barracks for training, he contracted malaria. He was given two months of leave to recover with his family back in Żabie. When he was sent back to the Army, he discovered the unit was in chaos, and decided to return back to his family. In late 1941, during the German invasion of the Soviet Union, the Germans reached the area of Żabie, and killing operations began. Some of Danek’s family, including his brother Arie, were among the casualties. The family moved into a small house on the outside of town, as the killings continued. After three days, the Gertners set out to find their former maid, who hid them until they contacted Danek’s uncle Jehoschua, who took the family to Kosow (Kosiv, Ukraine). In the summer of 1942, Danek’s father passed away, distraught over the death of his son Arie, leaving behind Danek’s mother and his two siblings. Soon after, the Germans enlisted Jews for forced labor. It became clear to Danek and his brothers that the group they were put in was to be executed, and began plotting their escape. Mirek was able to run off from the group and escape, despite being shot at. The next day, the group marched toward Kolomyia. Danek ran from the ranks and avoided being shot at as well, and hid amongst dead bodies laid out in a cemetery. Both Mirek and Danek made their way back to Kosow, and with their mother traveled to the Kolomyia ghetto. Schimon was taken to Kolomyia as well, but was immediately sent to a concentration camp and was killed. After another roundup of Jews for selection in the ghetto, he was placed on a train, but managed to escape and make his way back to Kolomyia. Unable to find his mother, Mirek and Danek fled to Hungary. There he met his future wife, Jadwiga Grüner. The two stayed in Hungary until August, 1944, when they arranged to be smuggled into Romania. Jadwiga and Danek married in September. They then traveled to Budapest as the Soviet army was quickly approaching, and were soon liberated. After the war, Danek and his brother Mirek became successful businessmen.

Learn about over 1,000 camps and ghettos in Volume I and II of this encyclopedia, which are available as a free PDF download. This reference provides text, photographs, charts, maps, and extensive indexes.